Abstract

Extravasation of certain drugs can make an injury on the injection site. It occurs more often in the fragile skin of children and old people. Immunoglobulin treats immune-mediated diseases effectively, such as a primary deficiency of antibodies or autoimmune diseases. A 9 months old boy came to hospital complaining of a fever for 5 days. He had bilateral non-purulent conjunctival injection, erythema of the lips and rashes on the hands and feet. On the echocardiography, the left coronary artery was dilated. He was diagnosed with Kawasaki disease. We started an intravenous immunoglobulin injection. After 7 hours, edema and a change in skin color appeared at the intravenous injection site on his right hand. We removed the catheter and applied a cold pack. Under impression of phlebitis, we applied Mupirocin ointment and Prednicarbate ointment with a dressing, twice a day. Within an outpatient follow up period, a skin necrosis with pus emerged. Coagulase negative Staphylococcus was detected from the pus by microbial culture study. We referred the patient to the Department of Plastic Surgery, and operated a debridement of the skin necrosis and a full thickness skin graft. He was discharged from hospital without a certain problem. The lesion was cured and left a scar. There was no recurrence or exacerbation on the skin graft lesion within a follow up period of 6 months since the surgery. We report a rare case of skin necrosis after extravasation of intravenous immunoglobulin, which had not been reported in Korea before.

Highlights

  • Intravenous drugs can cause extravasation injuries around the route of vessel [1]

  • There have been two case reports of the skin necrosis after the intravenous immunoglobulin extravasation in worldwide, one is from Australia and the other is from New Zealand [10,11]

  • We report a case of the skin necrosis after the intravenous immunoglobulin extravasation

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Summary

Introduction

Intravenous drugs can cause extravasation injuries around the route of vessel [1]. commonly used fluid such as normal saline and dextrose water, and electrolytes, calcium, anticancer drugs are causes of these injuries [2,3]. Intravenous drugs can cause extravasation injuries around the route of vessel [1]. The extravasation happens more in children whose blood vessels are small and cannot express their pain and in the elderly whose blood vessels and skin are fragile [4]. There have been two case reports of the skin necrosis after the intravenous immunoglobulin extravasation in worldwide, one is from Australia and the other is from New Zealand [10,11].

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